Anna Adamec is
set to celebrate her 100th birthday Sunday, Dec. 22. Above she poses for a photo
Wednesday with her daughter Marian at Neillsville Care and Rehabilitation.
(Photo by Todd Schmidt/Clark County Press)

Anna Adamec observed her
100th birthday with a huge party Sunday at Neillsville Care and Rehabilitation.

She sat down with her daughter Marian before lunch Wednesday to share
details about her long and rewarding life, in between sorting through a large
stack of Christmas cards that came in the daily mail.

Anna was born in
West Allis Dec. 22, 1913. Her parents, Frank and Christine Sojka, moved to a
farm nine miles west of Pittsville in the Town of Hiles in Wood County when Anna
was three years old.

Anna was the second of seven children. She had three
brothers, Frank, William and Wencil and three sisters, Christine, Barbara and
Francis, who died as an infant.

They established a homestead farm with
80 acres Frank cleared by hand. He also established a small blacksmith shop on
the farm. Frank built a 16-foot by 16-foot house with an addition for use as a
barn, accommodating a team of horses and eight dairy cows. Eventually, the
operation expanded with another barn with a haymow being added, along with
another eight cows.

By age nine, Anna was assisting with the car of her
twin brothers and younger sister. “I remember helping with the cleaning and
cooking,” Anna said. “I fed corn starch pudding to the kids while dad was
picking potatoes.” The family had a large garden. Anna picked beans, and by age
13, was milking eight cows by hand and helping to feed chickens, geese, goats
and ducks.

Frank kept expanding the homestead. Eventually, a total of
240 acres were cleared. Anna said a nephew, Donald Sojka, still owns the
original 80-acre parcel.

The farm was adjacent to City Point and the
railroad tracks. The location brought a variety of visitors. “When I was young,
many hobos would come on the train,” Anna said, “We fed many of them. Sometimes
they would chop wood for us. When I was home alone, I was scared when they came
by the house.”

Anna attended the Scranton country school through the
eighth grade. She kept helping on the farm until she was hired as a nanny for a
family in Wisconsin Rapids, doing housekeeping work and carrying for children.
That was a line of work she continued in for a while, moving on to Milwaukee to
work as a housekeeper for the Dr. Hermann family with three children. In the mid
1930’s, Anna moved to Chicago to be a nanny for a pharmacist’s family with two
children.

On a visit home, Anna met Anton (Tony) Adamec at the Palms
Supper Club in Hatfield. After a three-month courtship, Judge Schoengarth
married them at Neillsville at the Courthouse Nov. 26, 1938.

Anna got
back into the rural lifestyle with Tony, who had a farm in the Town of Levis.
They had three children, Marian, John and Anton (Tony), who passed away two
years ago.

Anna put her upbringing to work on the farm. She did a lot of
cooking, baking and canning, along with tending a garden, helping with haying
and caring for geese and chickens.

“We sold geese at holiday times.” Anna
recalled. “I kept the feathers. We sent some feathers to Chicago to be sold, and
I used some feathers to make pillows for the family.”

She also milked 15
cows by hand when her husband took a job at the Farmer’s Union Mill in
Neillsville. In the winter months, Anna made rag rugs out of strips of fabric.

Anna and Tony love to dance the polka, waltz and fox trot at the Silver Dome
and at the Palms Supper Club. She also enjoyed tending her flower garden and
feeding birds.

Many friends, particularly deer hunters, made the Adamec’s
house a regular stop to partake of coffee, apple strudel and Anna’s specialty,
Kolaches.

For many years, Anna served as secretary of Bohemian WFCA Lodge
#303 in the Town of Levis. She is still a member of Bohemian Lodge #303 in Pray.

In the mid 1960s, Anna and Tony went on a month-long vacation to
California. They visited relatives and took in sights, including the Redwood
Forest, Grand Canyon, Las Vegas, Lake Tahoe, The Corn Palace, the Black Hills
and Mount Rushmore. They also took shorter trips to visit relatives in Arkansas
and Louisiana.

“For the most part, they just stayed home on the farm to
raise a family,” Marian said.

Anna was able to stay on the farm until 2003, when she moved to Neillsville Care
and Rehabilitation. She had cataract eye surgery years ago, and is now pretty
much confined to a wheelchair.

She enjoys word-find books and
participating in many activities, including music, picnics, card games and
watching Wii bowling games.

Anna is not currently taking any prescription
medications. She had a solid reply when asked what contributed to her long and
rewarding life. “I loved hard work and the quiet country life,” Anna said. “We
also had a strong family. All that made me tough.”

Family members and
friends from Connecticut, Michigan, Minnesota and the Milwaukee area attended
Anna’s 100th birthday party Sunday at Neillsville Care and Rehabilitation.